spark-dev mailing list archives

Xiao, to check if I understood correctly, do you mean the below?
1. Use our fork with Hadoop 2.x profile for now, and use Hive 2.x with
Hadoop 3.x profile.
2. Make another newer version of thrift server by Hive 2.x(?) in Spark side.
3. Target the transition to Hive 2.x completely and slowly later in the
future.
2019년 2월 5일 (화) 오전 1:16, Xiao Li <gatorsmile@gmail.com>님이 작성:
> To reduce the impact and risk of upgrading Hive execution JARs, we can
> just upgrade the built-in Hive to 2.x when using the profile of Hadoop 3.x.
> The support of Hadoop 3 will be still experimental in our next release.
> That means, the impact and risk are very minimal for most users who are
> still using Hadoop 2.x profile.
>
> The code changes in Spark thrift server are massive. It is risky and hard
> to review. The original code of our Spark thrift server is from
> Hive-service 1.2.1. To reduce the risk of the upgrade, we can inline the
> new version. In the future, we can completely get rid of the thrift server,
> and build our own high-performant JDBC server.
>
> Does this proposal sound good to you?
>
> In the last two weeks, Yuming was trying this proposal. Now, he is on
> vacation. In China, today is already the lunar New Year. I would not expect
> he will reply this email in the next 7 days.
>
> Cheers,
>
> Xiao
>
>
>
> Sean Owen <srowen@gmail.com> 于2019年2月4日周一 上午7:56写道：
>
>> I was unclear from this thread what the objection to these PRs is:
>>
>> https://github.com/apache/spark/pull/23552
>> https://github.com/apache/spark/pull/23553
>>
>> Would we like to specifically discuss whether to merge these or not? I
>> hear support for it, concerns about continuing to support Hive too,
>> but I wasn't clear whether those concerns specifically argue against
>> these PRs.
>>
>>
>> On Fri, Feb 1, 2019 at 2:03 PM Felix Cheung <felixcheung_m@hotmail.com>
>> wrote:
>> >
>> > What’s the update and next step on this?
>> >
>> > We have real users getting blocked by this issue.
>> >
>> >
>> > ________________________________
>> > From: Xiao Li <gatorsmile@gmail.com>
>> > Sent: Wednesday, January 16, 2019 9:37 AM
>> > To: Ryan Blue
>> > Cc: Marcelo Vanzin; Hyukjin Kwon; Sean Owen; Felix Cheung; Yuming Wang;
>> dev
>> > Subject: Re: [DISCUSS] Upgrade built-in Hive to 2.3.4
>> >
>> > Thanks for your feedbacks!
>> >
>> > Working with Yuming to reduce the risk of stability and quality. Will
>> keep you posted when the proposal is ready.
>> >
>> > Cheers,
>> >
>> > Xiao
>> >
>> > Ryan Blue <rblue@netflix.com> 于2019年1月16日周三 上午9:27写道：
>> >>
>> >> +1 for what Marcelo and Hyukjin said.
>> >>
>> >> In particular, I agree that we can't expect Hive to release a version
>> that is now more than 3 years old just to solve a problem for Spark. Maybe
>> that would have been a reasonable ask instead of publishing a fork years
>> ago, but I think this is now Spark's problem.
>> >>
>> >> On Tue, Jan 15, 2019 at 9:02 PM Marcelo Vanzin <vanzin@cloudera.com>
>> wrote:
>> >>>
>> >>> +1 to that. HIVE-16391 by itself means we're giving up things like
>> >>> Hadoop 3, and we're also putting the burden on the Hive folks to fix
a
>> >>> problem that we created.
>> >>>
>> >>> The current PR is basically a Spark-side fix for that bug. It does
>> >>> mean also upgrading Hive (which gives us Hadoop 3, yay!), but I think
>> >>> it's really the right path to take here.
>> >>>
>> >>> On Tue, Jan 15, 2019 at 6:32 PM Hyukjin Kwon <gurwls223@gmail.com>
>> wrote:
>> >>> >
>> >>> > Resolving HIVE-16391 means Hive to release 1.2.x that contains
the
>> fixes of our Hive fork (correct me if I am mistaken).
>> >>> >
>> >>> > Just to be honest by myself and as a personal opinion, that
>> basically says Hive to take care of Spark's dependency.
>> >>> > Hive looks going ahead for 3.1.x and no one would use the newer
>> release of 1.2.x. In practice, Spark doesn't make a release 1.6.x anymore
>> for instance,
>> >>> >
>> >>> > Frankly, my impression was that it's, honestly, our mistake to
fix.
>> Since Spark community is big enough, I was thinking we should try to fix it
>> by ourselves first.
>> >>> > I am not saying upgrading is the only way to get through this but
I
>> think we should at least try first, and see what's next.
>> >>> >
>> >>> > It does, yes, sound more risky to upgrade it in our side but I
>> think it's worth to check and try it and see if it's possible.
>> >>> > I think this is a standard approach to upgrade the dependency than
>> using the fork or letting Hive side to release another 1.2.x.
>> >>> >
>> >>> > If we fail to upgrade it for critical or inevitable reasons
>> somehow, yes, we could find an alternative but that basically means
>> >>> > we're going to stay in 1.2.x for, at least, a long time (say ..
>> until Spark 4.0.0?).
>> >>> >
>> >>> > I know somehow it happened to be sensitive but to be just literally
>> honest to myself, I think we should make a try.
>> >>> >
>> >>>
>> >>>
>> >>> --
>> >>> Marcelo
>> >>
>> >>
>> >>
>> >> --
>> >> Ryan Blue
>> >> Software Engineer
>> >> Netflix
>>
>